hi there, good morning. question; at the 3:22 mark it shows a shot of a Doppler radar screen. does that show the altitude of the clouds? if they [the clouds] are low enough, are you able to fly over a storm?
Transavia est une entreprise incroyablement raciste. Ne vous exposez pas à la misère à laquelle j'ai été confrontée. J'essaie actuellement de les poursuivre en justice pour crime de haine.
I sat next to a nice young man from Atlanta to Chicago last month. I could tell he was deathly afraid of flying. After asking him a few common pleasant questions I found out that he was a musician. I asked if I could listen to his music and he broke out two pairs of earphones. I listened to a portion and asked him to turn it off so we could discuss the nuances. I kept him engaged the entire time. The entire flight I kept him so busy talking about his music that he didn't have time to be terrified. I saw him at the baggage claim area after the flight and he said "Now I know what you were doing". He thanked me, I gave him a knowing smile, we shook hands, said good luck to each other, and went our separate ways.
Regional pilot based in the U.S.A. I watch these in order to gather information to pass along to my passengers when they have their concerns flying on smaller regional jets. To passengers, everything said here is absolutely correct. It is literally the safest thing you will do all day. I love my life, I value it very much. If I see ANYTHING that makes me think the flight won't be safe, I sure as hell ain't going anywhere. My advice to nervous fliers, Remember that your pilots have their own lives to worry about too. We have families and loved ones just like you do. We just want to do our jobs safely and go home to our families just like you do. We wouldn't be doing this every day if we thought the worst was even possible. We are NOT daredevils. We are NOT going to take off if there's anything that makes us think it will be unsafe. So please, relax, enjoy the flight.
What helped me was looking at a flight tracker understating exactly how many planes was in the air on a daily basis Now I’m taking a private pilots license can’t believe I was fearful of flying back in the days
"Remember that your pilots have their own lives to worry about too" Couldn't that be said about many jobs? Driving buses and trucks, for example, which is already much more dangerous than commercial aviation, yet many people choose to speed and even defend it and vote against measures that try to prevent it. What sets the airline industry apart?
@@samuelitooooo Very good question, I’ll try to explain the best I can. Airline pilots are very different than commercial drivers. We require far more training, go through much more rigorous screening, and have a much more safety-orientated culture than other transportation professionals. Pilots who have a caviler attitude toward safety don’t last very long in the airline industry. If they want “thrills” they’re welcome to go fly aerobatic planes or low level jobs (like crop dusting) But they can’t bring that sort of attitude to a passenger jet. Passenger airline pilots have to ask themselves “would I feel comfortable putting my children on that plane flown by that guy”. If the answer is no, they don’t make it very far. All of us ask that question about ourselves and our own colleagues. Basically, we weed them out. There’s quite a few reasons we haven’t had a fatal crash since 2009 (in the USA) that’s just one of the big ones.
“This is Captain Nigel and we will be flying at 35,000 feet with a flight time of 3 hours…” When I hear someone like this guy..I know that I’m going to be safe!
Ive been an air traffic controller for 15 years. Ive never seen a commercial crew get remotely close to losing an airplane. I see thousands of safe flights every day. Airline pilots are extremely skilled and professional and those jets have many redundant systems. The crews take the safety of those planes very seriously. I would have zero worries flying on any airline.
It’s simply the fear of knowing that you could possibly be that one no matter how many times people say 99% of the planes Land you will always think you’re that one percent and that’s something no one can save you from
I was terrified of flying and would sit rigidly in my seat just willing it to be over and that was just a 2 hour flight to Portugal. Then my daughter emigrated to New Zealand and I knew I would have to go one day, so I Watched a lot of videos like this one and felt reassured. I've now flown to NZ 9 times, and apart from still not liking the feeling of Turbulence I know I can do it even on my own. I worked out that I have achieved around 125,000 miles taking holidays abroad and NZ into consideration. There's nothing like going to visit my daughter and family to inspire me to get on that plane.
I'm like you. I would get terrible sweating of the hands, and then stomach pains like IBS and just convinced every change in engine nose or turbulence was a sign. Now I try to sneak a few drinks before then chewing gum.
@@Since-wen if it helps, I’ve heard somewhere that no plane has ever crashed due to bad turbulence. Think of it as you have a little small toy airplane and you put it in jelly/jello, the toy plane will shake around in the middle but it doesn’t fall out due to the shaking. That’s what turbulence is like.
The best flights i have had even with Bumpy Turbulence have been where the Pilot has reassured us that its turbulence and nothing major to worry about, they keep us notified and informed. The worst and scariest flights i have had is when the pilot barely communicates and lets us to our own imagination as to wtf is going on....
sometimes being an actual pilot makes it worse. I just keep thinking of what hes doing, when, and why. why didnt he put the gear down yet? why is he throttling down the engines? why are we making a steep turn on approach with the landing gear down? why are we at full throttle on landing with the nose attitude pitched very high? why are the flaps being retracted already? why haven't we lifted on takeoff yet? maybe he needs me to come in there and help him lol. i like to be in control and see out the front window of the cockpit, not just rely on natural feels in the cabin and wonder what lies ahead...
I had a flight around 7 years ago, and we were flying around a hurricane, but it was still very bumpy. It felt like we were actually free falling for 3-4 seconds at a time. Ppl on the plane were screaming and it made it 10 times worse. None of the staff or pilots said anything, and some of the attendants even looked nervous. After we landed was when they finally informed us why it was so turbulent. After that experience, I have been scared to fly. I know planes can withstand all of that and we were probably not in any real danger, but just the whole atmosphere of ppl screaming on the plane and panicking is terrifying.
I used to be afraid of flying when I was younger but what helped me was actually watching air crash investigation shows that told stories of crashes, what went wrong, and how things have improved since, and now I love watching UA-cam shows like Mentour Pilot who tell stories of crashes and analyze them in depth from a pilot’s perspective. From watching these shows I’ve learned that crashes are incredibly rare and usually are the result of a chain of multiple failures and errors. Pilots are very well trained, there’s procedures for most emergencies, modern airplanes have many redundant systems, and all the crashes that happened in the past have been thoroughly investigated and changes have been implemented to prevent those problems from happening again. Aside from that, also getting comfortable with the reality that I’m going to die someday somehow, and if it’s my time to go then it’s my time to go, and I’m not going to let fear hinder me from living life to the fullest, which includes traveling.
Funny, but these investigations are the reason I fear more than before. Sure, nowadays there are many redundancy systems, but~95% of the crashes are human error, and there's no the be-all and end-all fix for that.
mate im literally watching this bc im having my 1st flight in 2 days and im deathly afraid. I’ll take after your example and not let fear restrict me from living life to the fullest. cheers 🥂
What helped me is when looking up in the sky and seeing a plane fly by you are never worried of it crashing down or not landing safely. You just think 'oh cool a plane, I wonder where it's going'. Still trying to overcome my fear when being on a plane but that did help.
After watching this video, I booked my first flight in over 20 years. Both my flights were great, little turblence but like you said, nothing to worry about. Thank You for making this video!
I’m a nervous flyer and always have been. If ever there’s something I’m unsure of during a flight I’ll always look at the body language of the crew. If they look unconcerned that’s good enough for me. Still doesn’t stop me from sweating and holding onto something the entire time though! 😂 I think the trick is to fly more. I only fly once a year so I never give myself a chance to get accustomed to being in a plane frequently enough.
Im a psychiatrist and actually have a patient that is a flight attendant, and after he developed a panic disorder (unrelated to flying), he started to have symptoms while flying too, as if he had a phobia. My point is that fear of flying is totally irrational and is much more related to anxiety disorders than to anything else. So even if a crew member looks scared, it just means that he/she probably has a little bit of anxious tendencies, thats all
@@pasteldecarne485 it’s not an irrational fear, as humans we aren’t designed to be up high, it’s natural to be scared of heights and confined spaces that we can’t get out of .
I used to be a nervous flyer as well. Happened upon the videos of 2 UA-camrs; 74 Gear & Mentour Pilot. Their love of flying is contagious. I found that my fear turned to curiosity the more I learned about aviation from them. The amount of thought that has gone into even the thread pattern of the plane tires is amazing. It also helped me to no longer watch videos from social media influencers, who are more emotional than factual about aviation. Now when it comes to these type of videos I look for the commentator to have at least 3 bars on his/her shoulders (4 bars signifies a captain).
The more you fly the more your odds on you being involved in an air disaster . The aircrew are trained to look cool & act as if there is nothing wrong ,if the aircraft & all souls on board are doomed . They will smile & tell you the engines supposed to be on fire it’s quite normal for half the wing to break off now & then .
I used to be absolutely terrified of flying. Then I was on a flight to LGA on a regional jet & we encountered a bad storm so we were bouncing around all over the place & had to abort landing twice, eventually landing in Providence, Rhode Island because we didn't have enough fuel to keep circling. I was so scared, I was crying I even threw up because of the turbulence (and my nerves, I'm sure). We refueled & back up we went, the storm had passed & it was fine. Ever since that flight, I realized that it was safe, I was fine, the pilots KNOW WHAT THEY'RE DOING & now flying doesn't bother me at all. I do also watch a lot of Pilot You Tube channels for this very reason as well. Thank you for this video & for keeping us all safe!
@NostradamusJr. true what you said , but it’s is the present feeling of anxiety and suffering that’s I’m not comfortable with while flying . How do you avoid that? Not possible !
@NostradamusJr. I’d say for most it’s the fear of dying (the unknown), not the suffering. I think most people know going from 500mph into a ball of fire will be instant death with no suffering.
@Nitrodamous people where drowning in the ocean, gasping for air. Its not said you face zero pain. It all happend. But your content is a good hint to stir my thoughts on the next flight
I want this pilot for every flight I ever take the rest of my life. You were so good at explaining things confidently and inspiring me to let go of my fears. What an air Chad. Great job!
What makes me most nervous on a flight is when the air hostess says the words 'No more, you've had enough' It only takes me a few seconds before 'I need more beer' survival mode kicks in..
I heard another "ask the pilot" put it very aptly. They don't fly around turbulence because the plane can't handle it, they fly around it for your comfort. They plane will do just fine.
I'm on the verge of crying thinking of my flight tomorrow, but I really appreciate hearing how calm you are and this is helping a bit. I guess I will be watching these videos all day! Thank you!
I used to be morbidly petrified of flying. To the point I needed Valium to get on the dam plane. Didn’t want to drink too much and not be in control. Tried rescue remedy. Everything apart from hypnosis. That was all around 15yrs ago. Now I just put my headphones on. Listen to my favourite tunes. Read the kindle and basically zone out. Works for me. Oh apart from the one time we where coming in to Leeds/Bradford airport it was a bit windy so the pilot informed everyone that he would be using the short run way so he would be coming in hard and fast. I was blissfully unaware of this. But the Mrs nudged me removed an ear cup from the headphones and said “ where coming in hard and fast” 🙈🙈 my guts dropped a mile. But we landed with no problem. It’s now a standing joke when ever we travel abroad.
@@tesiemarie8942 my flight both ways were great! Coming back was easier since I was more grounded in what I was excited to see again, ie my cat. But there was a period when we were landing where we had to go through thousands of feet of clouds due to the weather which scared me but I just reminded myself that even though I couldn't see, there were air traffic controllers and many other people aiding the pilot!
I have a flight tomorrow morning and have been frozen all day today! I used to fly so much and have no issue at all, now lately I've been having panic attack just thinking of flying. I hope these videos help me tomorrow!
I love seeing an old, retired pilot He (or she) has made it through thousands, possibly tens of thousands of flights and is still here to tell the tale. Gives me comfort.
Once about ten years ago I sat next to a girl who was really afraid of flying. Her friend was on her other side. We were in the first row, no 1st class so we could see the cabin crew getting ready for take-off. She started crying when they closed the doors, then calmed down, got a bit agitated again at take-off. The flight was about an hour, and she calmed down a bit while in the air, but again the landing was a bit tougher for her. By that time me and her female friend held both her hands, and since I was in the window seat I warned her seconds before touchdown on the runway that there would be a slight bump. At one point she said to me "that makes sense, you made me feel better now" which was after I pointed out to her that "the entire crew on planes like this, they're normal people who do this for a living every day, and you know there's no way, anyone, ANYONE, who is mentally stable would do this work for any pay in the world if they knew they'd be in absolute grave danger of getting killed every day at work, don't you think?" It worked out fine, and although these feelings at times can be so strong they're beyond any logical reasoning, I take some pride in having been able to calm her.
I was on a flight one night with a friend when I spotted another airliner passing by us quite a distance away but close to the same altitude. I told him it was going to get a bit bumpy in a few minutes. He laughed as if how would I know. A few minutes later the plane started to shake a bit and then stop. When he asked how I knew that I told him that there was airliner that passed us close to the same altitude as we were and we would soon be in it's wake. Yep, airliners can leave a wake just like a boat does on water.
She is not the unusual one. You are. We are ground dwellers. There's nothing natural about getting in a tin tube at 35,000 feet or less. Think about it.
I went through a time of being terrified to fly, but had to if I wanted to visit my parents. I educated myself on the aircraft, how it functions etc., because knowing that something I thought was scary, was completely normal, helped immensely!!
I used to be a very fearful flyer. My daughter works in the aviation industry and my son is a fan of everything that has to do with planes. They have taught me so many things about how the aviation industry works that my fear went away completely. Knowledge is power😊
@@DeadlyBeast205 thank you😊 Well, apparently the fear didn’t go away completely😑 it comes back sometimes but I still hop on the plane because I know how safe it is, I know my mind is playing tricks on me and I want to go places 😁
@@emma58242 you’re welcome and try going on a plane with a friend or someone you can talk to. You can also listen to music to keep you calm. I even brought my Nintendo Switch on a flight and had the best time ever! Flying is really fun when you get used to it
I've heard most of these before, but what really helped me as a very nervous flyer was the Pilots calm demeanour. His comfort in explaining the details of what would could go wrong and how they would counter it is so reassuring. Cheers!
then imagine being a pilot like him, 2 flights a day. driving feels safe probably because there are less elements to worry about but it actually isn’t as safe as he said.
Just remember that when you're flying, whatever happens is out of your control. I find it comforting to know that there is nothing I could personally do to stop a plane crashing and by accepting that resignation I feel better during severe turbulence etc.
Surely the knowledge is that 10 fully loaded airliners would have to drop out of the air every single day to match the equivalent 3600 people a day that die in vehicle accidents.
You might try watching a show called Mayday or Air Crash Investigation (depending on where you see it). It depicts crashes in great detail, which may seem scary at first, but they also explain in great detail exactly what caused it and what has been done since then to make sure something like that never happens again. My favorite thing about it is they don't sensationalize and they don't exaggerate. Everything is shown as accurately as possible from an educational standpoint. And almost every time some disaster happened, you find that it was like 9 different things that all had to go wrong all at once for a crash to happen, just crazy odds. When you learn about just how hard it actually is to have a crash and everything we've learned from the ones that happened, that knowledge about what happened and why and most importantly why it wont happen again actually makes you feel a lot safer. Because every time a plane has crashed, every other flight after it has gotten safer.
I have been a passenger on maybe a couple of flights. All of those flights, before we got off the runway I got a panic attack. Hearing this was much needed. I am glad to hear about all the safety checks and ways you guys help us. Thank you for this video and getting people to where they need to be safely.😊
I used to be dreadfully afraid of flying. I got over it. How? By flying a lot. Once I knew all the little noises and g-forces and bumps were the same on every flight, I knew to expect them and they didn't bother me as much. I am still not crazy about flying, but it has more to do with getting through the airports on each end.
I wanted to thank you for this video. I watched it the day before a flight and it was the most restful, stress-free flight I’ve ever had in my life. I usually need two anxiolytic pills to get through a flight… I feel a lot more serene and in safe hands after watching this. Turbulences and lightning were my biggest fears.
I've been flying for work (Regional and National Account Manager positions) for over 30 years and still have anxiety with turbulence, so I've started watching videos to help me. I've been on 2 flights with "Severe" turbulence, and on one plane that depressurized during flight and we had to make an emergency landing. Looking back on it, it was scary, but everyone was safe. Thankfully everyone was seated with seatbelts on. As others have said, this pilot is so reassuring!
Excellent work, Captain! I always direct people to a chap named Arnold Barnett, an expert in aviation safety/risk and a Professor of Statistics at MIT who says the following, "“If you were to take one random flight a day, you would, on average, need to fly every day for 55,000 years before being involved in a fatal crash”. Also, I know it's not everyone's area of interest but I'd reckon that just quickly reading up on some of the basic physics that underpin flying could do wonders to calm a nervous flyer, taking away some of the mystique and seeing it rooted in solid science.
Sir did did such a marvelous way of explaining many of the fears some people share. I am one of them. May God continue to take you and your passengers to and from their journey safely. God Bless You throughout your career.
Here is what I do when I fly- If there is turbulence or anything that makes me nervous, I watch the flight attendants. I figure that, if it is serious, they’ll know and I’ll be able to tell by how they act. This has totally kept me from freaking out many times 😂 I first thought of this when I was on a crowded flight, sitting next to the steward area. When we hit a bunch of turbulence, a flight attendant was sitting on a fold down chair that faced the side of my seat. So the plane is bouncing around, and I’m all white knuckled freaking out, and I turned to my left, and that flight attendant was totally laughing at me 😂. I started thinking about it then and relaxed.
I used to do that too but then I though “what if they are trained to act calm for the sake of the passengers to not freak them out?” And then my anxiety returned :(
Flight crew are definitely aware that people watch them first lol, it is indeed part of training and they know that everyone is watching them for cues. That said, if you’re used to flying as much as then, nothing rattles you. They’re not pretending to not be bothered because they’re not! It’s like riding the bus for them.
I used to have an awful fear of take off. I overcame this by filming the take off on my iPhone as I was concentrating on the filming rather than the actual take off. Thanks for the explanations Mark, wonderful job….
I’m also not only scared to death at takeoff, but also I get disoriented from the climbing and the cracking noise. Fear of flying really affected me negatively. Avoiding traveling as much as I can. I wished I could have gone to many places but I haven’t because of this.
The longest flight I've ever been on was 13 hours from Switzerland to Atlanta and I have flown many times before then with relatively decent skies. The plane would shake but it felt like being on a bumpy road. I had no issues with flying besides that weird feeling when taking off until I was on a less than an hour flight from New Orleans to Dallas and we hit open air turbulence. It felt like the plane was going down for a few seconds and it was so upsetting that everyone on the plane screamed. I never experienced that before but since then I have been terrified of flying. This has been helpful, I'm learning more about airplanes.
I used to be scared to death of flying, my wife was a general aviation pilot who helped me get over my fear, not necessarily only explaining to me how safe flying is but rather exposing me to more practical and logic driven activities which helped rewire my brain, it was a long process but one of the many positive side effects to this was overcoming a debilitating fear of flying, we just finished a three-leg journey to and from Japan and back to the States and it was a piece of cake. I believe that videos such as this one should be made available in airports and/or even as part of the in- flight viewing experience for the white-knuckle flyer, I believe these videos would help immensely. Thanks!
She never had to deal with wind-sheer but she had to crab a couple of times in very windy areas while landing, definitely not wind-sheer though luckily. Have you had to deal with wind-sheer? If so what was it like?
@@patricktuorto as a passenger, i experienced wind shear, a week ago, before landing, the pilot had to do a go around so the plane doesnt crash, with a airbus A 320, at Rome airport. It scared me more, the moment when the pilot before landing went pedal to the metal and go up again LOL
currently on vacation in cancun and had to experience 3 aborted landings, due to a rainstorm, before finally landing safely on the 4th. never been more terrified of flying in my life afterwards. this video definitely helped relieve a bit of my anxiety for the flight back.
Appreciate the time to make this video. A lot of people just don't realize how much these jets can do, even if it means going back to basic flying. Thank you for the time !
I am Almost 50 and haven't flown since I was 5. I've been getting the itch lately to give it a try - just a short flight - and big brother mustve heard me talking about it and this video was recommended. I'm so glad I watched this video - I hope he ends up being my pilot on my first flight 🤣🤣
Don't let your fear hold you back. There are so many amazing places to see in this world. I used to be scared of flying but I took a job that required I fly 100+ days per year I have now been on thousands of flights all over the world and sleep like a baby. I used to not even be able to enjoy vacations because the fear of the flight. You will be very happy once you overcome this fear. It will take some time but just keep pushing through and you will get over it.
Please, give it a go Our body change. I used to fly a lot, all around the world number of times. Living in Australia,the trip to Europe are extremely long. I hated it. Now I'm 57,and 2 hours trip is too frightening for me.I changed . Last 3 years I stopped traveling even interstate because I'm uncomfortable to go. I don't know what's happened to me but my brain changed.
There is no word for the amount of fear and anxiety I had when I first started to fly internationally I never liked flying domestically either. My nephew is a pilot and basically told me the more I fly the less anxious I’ll get. I pondered that and looked at my life and the more I did anything that was fearful or knew The less anxious I got. I’ve been to Thailand and back many times now and yes I’m a little anxious and hopefully I won’t jinx myself but so far every time I fly I feel better and better. Mann and I spent decades and insisted on many many hours rather than fly. Noise canceling headphones are very good because of my phobia I simply put them on place some type of nature sounds so it doesn’t feel like I’m in a small tube close my eyes and that really helps too. Thank you for taking the time to make these videos. I wish everyone much peace happiness and flying.
Thanks! Listening to you calms me down! As much as I like traveling, I am scared of flying. For every turbulence, the devil is quickly in my ear telling me that we are crashing and my heart just drops to my stomach 😢
Thank you so much for sharing this information. Although I have been flying since I was a child, now a 53 year old adult my fear of flying has increased dramatically over the years. The slightest bit of turbulence and that’s me blowing in the sick bag and gripping my seat for dear life. Watching you explain everything and in great depth I can honestly say you have given me reassurance. Next time I’m flying I will remember this. Thank you, flying is not a nice fear so I feel reassured.
Lisa, this is me as well. I flew when I was younger and absolutely loved it!! For some reason, now in my 40s, I developed some flight anxiety. I don't know why or where it came from, but I totally get where you're coming from. I hate it. I don't get sick from it, but I do get that uncomfortable, on the edge of me seat, anxiety.
@@SlammedZeroI don't think children worry about that type of accident, unless an adult talks them into it. As adults, we think much more about our demise, so it's more normal to be anxious on a plane. I take the easy way out and pop a prescription pill, works pretty good.
This has helped a lot. I am TERRIFIED of flying, but my childhood best friend is getting married in Vegas which is 26 hours away from home. Her parents, very very grateful to them, paid for my plane ticket to go. I will be on the same flight as them, but I am still very scared. I hate heights (really just falling from those heights) and feeling like I am trapped. Those are my number 1 fears. This will also be my first flight so it's a lot of unknowns and facing biggest fears. I was told by a pilot that I have control issues lol. He asked me if I get car sick in the back seat and then asked if I stare out the windshield when I am in the back to feel better and I said yes and he said "Seems like you need to be in control to feel better" lol. He was cool. But thank you again for this video, it really helps.
Thank you. I'm 45 and have flown a number on one hand. This has really really helped me. Going to Cancun at the end of September and will watch this monthly religiously. ❤
I’m in my late 50s and have just begun a change of career as an FA…. so I am getting used to turbulence. Probably the only thing I really worry about now is managing the cabin service in turbulence.🙃 This video is reassuring… thank you!
In my younger years I used to look forward to the flights and saw them as part of the whole holiday experience. However, this all changed in the early 2000s when I was on an Air France aircraft coming into land at CDG in Paris in heavy fog. The plane was flaring just prior to touch down when suddenly it went nose up and proceeded a full power steep climb. The pilot came over the PA to apologise but stated that there 'there was another aircraft on the runway'! We then circled for a few minutes before making a second attempted landing. As stated, there was heavy fog and looking out of the window, I could not see the ground. We hit the runway and then bounced up again before finally touching down very heavily. Again the pilot apologised and stated that the landing was 'offered by the auto-pilot'! I spent a few days at Disnetland Paris with my family before an uneventful return flight. I then avoided flying for a number of years as I was unnerved about the whole experience. I eventually got back to taking flights but was always very wary and did not enjoy the experience any more. However, after getting into the many Aviation Streams such as Airliners Live, Big Jet TV, Airline Videos Live etc. I realised just how many flights were taking off and landing just at single airports every day without incident. I also started to recognise all of the aircraft variants and getting more into it. I now look forwards to flying again and have just returned from New York for which we actually planned the travel just so we could fly Vigin Atlantic on an Airbus A350-1000. Hopefully this tale will help others as I should really have realised that the incident at CDG demonstrated that there are systems in place to avoid serious incidents such as runway incursions and as for the heavy landing? Well I couldn't see the ground due to the fog, so what else could the pilots do but use the systems available to them. As Mark says on this video, travelling to the airport is significantly more risky than the actual flights to and from your destination. 😉
Thank you very much for this informative video. I have a terrifying phobia for flying and having so much anxiety flying out in two weeks, this definitely helped ease my worries and I was able to book my flight.
This is immensely helpful, thank you! I struggle not to panic just watching UA-cam videos of flying, and videos like these are such great exposure for people like me. The last flight I went on, the air hostess told me to take a bus next time lol 😂 Literally just gonna imagine this guy is flying every flight I ever go on once I'm ready to fly again!
Having worked as crew and flown and have a little bit of knowledge about flying everything he said is spot on. Flying is safer than anything. Your cabin crew are highly trained in a plethora of different things. Serving your meal or drinks is the easy bit. Your pilots are trained more than you could imagine. Even as crew my first two flights I remember we was allowed to stay with the pilots in the cockpit for two flights and it was an amazing experience and insight into what they do on a day to day. For all cabin crew and pilots I always have upmost respect for having been one myself before. God bless you all
My Dad was an airline pilot, so I really have no great fear of flying.... I do sit on a plane and think "let's hope we get to the other end", but then I just accept it for what it is. I think that my Dad being such an amazing man, is the reason for not being worried.
same, he started in the US Navy, ive been around aircraft since i was in diapers. In them, around them, built models or them, flew them in simulators, im more scared driving through the city to get the Airport than the flight
I flew from London to Cape Town earlier this year and it was the most turbulent flight I've ever been on. In the 11 hours it took, there wasn't a period of 10 mins where there wasn't turbulence, so much so that the pilot didn't even bother to keep the seat belts sign on. I am not a nervous flyer generally but after one particular moment of bad turbulence ,I felt very let down by the staff who I overheard telling passengers "how scary that was." I believe that if the airline crew remain calm then the passengers remain calm and anxiety of flying can be reduced.
One time on a flight (I always try and get a window seat) the lady beside me noticed I was crying. She asked if I was okay and that flying was safe, there was nothing to get worried or be scared of. I replied that I'm not crying out of fear, but out of sheer awe. Every time I fly I cry - but they are tears of joy than of fear. I almost can't process how incredible it is that humans created flight for themselves. That this massive hunk of steel can get us across countries, oceans. The incredible sights from my seat - mountains, prairies, canyons, cities. I'll even schedule layovers so I can get more take offs than a direct flight. 😊 Oh how I wish this information would had been available to my late father. He was too terrified to fly most of his life and we ended up stuck in a car on an 8000 km round trip across Canada to visit family every summer. By the time he was 60 he finally gave it a try. Not that he ever liked it, but he did go on a few flights, so there's that. If my brain worked in more linear fashion I'd have taken flying lessons...it's utter joy to me.
I cry when I see London. I’m English, I live in Australia with my Australian family, so every few years, I fly home to see my parents. When I see the M25 that circulates London, I always cry. Same when I see Sydney, I see the harbour bridge, knowing my husband is waiting for me, and after a few weeks away, I’ve missed him, so….i get it.
I watched this video probably a year ago. Since then, I took a trip to Europe, and I want you to know that because of THIS video, I was very relaxed the entire time I was flying on the several flights I took. Not that I was terrified beforehand or anything, but this really eased my mind. Thank you for this.
I have a deep love and admiration for the accomplishments of science. But I still get scared when a plane hits turbulence. All the scientific knowledge in the world about lift, and wing-load, and 'it's the safest way to travel' abandon me when we hit rough patches. Thank you for this video. I think it will make me less afraid the next time I fly. Airline pilots and their matchless skill have my deepest respect and esteem.
I can read and listen to this all day, still keeps me locked up and the fear grows. It’s trying to get myself to let go and just go with it because we are missing out on too many trips because it controls me
It's weird, I've never been a nervous flyer but lately I'm getting anxiety for some reason. Specially in flights that go over the Atlantic ocean, I know about the ETOPS and that there's always once place to land in if the engines fail but it's out of my control! Hopefully I'll overcome it as I fly more, cause I know that realistically there's no risk at all.
Thank you Captain! We need this playing on inflight TV! I have had a fear of flying all my life and I am flying to Tokyo in November 2023, this helps my mind a little, I will be back afew times to rewatch 😊
I’m a nervous flier because I do not have a lot of knowledge about the physics and the mechanics of the airplanes. These videos make me feel better. Whenever I fly over the ocean I always worry about a water landing, mostly because of the sharks that will show up
I used to have a fear of flying, then I came to research and understand the mechanics of commercial flight... As well as all the systems in place. I could now go to sleep after boarding and feel comfortable I would land safely... And I am a person that understands physics and mechanics... I no longer fear flying by one bit. In fact, I like to sit a bit behind the wing to watch the flaps/slats and spoilers work... It now fascinates me.
Trains, planes, very chill, doesn't make me nervous at all. Can sleeping the whole time. Coaches? Taxis? Cars? Way worse, way more things that can go wrong.
Looking forward to this I am a very nervous flyer I hate it to be honest but to get to nice places I have to put myself through it so hopefully this video may help me 🙏🏻🤞🏻
People like you are the ones who helped me overcome my fear of flying, thank you! I find it awesome and terrifying at the same time. I’d never flown on my own (been flying the past 30 years) till last month, when I flew to Dubai and back. I’ve watched so many videos like this that I felt comfortable and relaxed, it’s the most enjoyable flight/s I’ve had to date. This videos are invaluable to a lot of people (me included), so thank you 🙏
lol i haven t yet even been alive for 30 years , but yeah i flew this year for the first time at 27 lol and it s exactly as you say awesome and terrifying (the takeoff is just epic)
I will add in one thing that I think a lot of people get scared of. Immediately after takeoff you will likely hear the engines drawing down in power. You may also feel like the aircraft is sinking. The first part occurs because the pilots have purposely reduced power from take off thrust to climb thrust. The second part is purely a sensation felt, but the aircraft is not decending!
Yes, you're right and it's even worse at my regional airport SNA (John Wayne). Short runway with rich neighborhoods at the end that don't want noise. Procedure is: Pilot lines up the craft, stands on the brakes and spools up the engines. Extreme thrust, quick V2 and steep angle for about 1000 ft. THEN he powers way down and levels off (feels like floating) over the mansions until clears the coast line then powers back up in a big way and climbs. Most pilots will announce all this to avoid the souls on board from "puckering".
This is definitely me and why my main fear of flying is fear of take off. But even knowing what is happening doesn’t help. I still experience intense anxiety to the point that I feel extremely anxious if I even think of booking a ticket. I avoid flying as much I can. It ruins so many things.
@@MissAmarintia I'm like you and getting worse as I age for some reason. I flew a ton in my 30's, 40's and 50's all over the world on some really dubious airlines (Aeroflot, Avianca, etc) but now, in my 60's I have to have at least a couple glasses of wine.
@MissAmarintia I would strongly encourage speaking with your doctor about this. Often when this type of phobia is encounter, your doctor may prescribe an antianxiety medication to take before flight. They can greatly help. And don't feel bad, a fear of flying is very common!
@@kendallevans4079 I take some Valerian Root herbal supplement about 45 minutes before boarding and it has really kicked in by the time that we take off. It is not a cure but it does help to calm the nerves. Now having started watching these vides and reading comments, I am thinking that my next flight will be much better simply because of the understanding about the noises and bumps etc. and when they are going to happen.
I’m afraid of flying. Flew for the first time in my adult life last year. Horrible experience personally but I made it and that was thanks to this video. I’m still afraid but I’m pushing through and going on another flight this year. Needed to watch this video again. It’s little coming from a random person on the internet I know but I just wanted to express my thanks to you for this video. It genuinely helps in my time of absolute irrational fear. Thank you.
Glad you added the part about the diversionary airport. I was on a long flight and we were running low on fuel. The captain tried landing in extremely rough weather, whole plane was bucking like a rodeo bull and he was unable to do so. He calmly climbed out and we landed at an airport 70 miles away.
@@isaidwhatisaid76 you know I’ve flown a lot of times and that was literally the worst I’ve ever been in. Seriously, people were praying out loud and I was making peace with the almighty but that was just one time for 20 minutes. To me anyway, 99% of the time it’s just, well, boring. Travel is something I just enjoy so much that I’m willing to put up with some bumps, I hope you can overcome your fear and give it a try.
@@isaidwhatisaid76 it can be nerve wracking for me also and especially my mom, but i try to think about how turbulence has never brought a plane down before and the odds of the one i'm on being the very first in the 100+ years of aviation are next to none. i also think of it like a thrill ride, because with all the safety features and regulations for civilian airplanes, you're as safe if not much safer on a turbulent plane than on a rollercoaster. there's also boats tho, not as quick but can be a fun adventure in itself! i hope you get to travel and do the things you want
I gotta be honest, I have a tremendous fear of flying. But this video breakdown absolutely helped. I guess it’s something about just feeling the turbulence, and not being abled to see or feel like I have any control. But I have definitely considered the facts this pilot mentioned. Hopefully I’ll be abled to love life traveling more and not restricted to just “vehicle only destinations” 😃😵💫
I got an app called turbi- this helps me massively because it gives you an idea of what to expect, so it doesn’t come as such a shock and doesn’t catch you off guard :)
As an aircraft mechanic for years. I love flying. A lot gos into flying and the people who control it care. Pilots and mechanics are very bonded. Especially if they start in the the military
Hi thank you for sharing your information. I had a phobia of flying many years ago. I took a two and a half day coach journey to the Algarve instead of a two and a half hour flight just so i did,nt need to fly. The way i was able to overcome my fear was to watch youtube videos of inside the cabin whilst taking off and landing over and over again. I do feel anxious these days but it does not stop me flying anymore, to this day i have flown over 140,000 air miles. Once again thanks for sharing, your video will help many others like me.
I am from the island with the 8th most difficult landing in the world (Madeira, Portugal) Ive always been fidgety about flying but i was ok with it. There was this one flights, that we spent 1h trying to land, but the wind was awful. I was full on panicking. I couldn’t breathe, i was crying, almost throwing up, and hallucinating. Ever since then ive had a severe phobia of flying. Going back home for the summer and im hoping this video will help lol
It was Concorde's accident that really boosted my fear. While I know that it was a very unique freak accident, it got stuck in my mind and a crash caused by something similar has always been a primary source of fear in my case 😅 But this video helps a lot nonetheless, thank you!
Thanks guy's. I love this new additional content so 10/10 to the team. This is so easy to follow and fascinating to watch...... Thank you so much. Proud to support AL and all you do and for the educational posts like this. Also, thank you for confirming that..... "You are more at risk driving to the airport", and probably more at risk of an injury pulling your luggage off the conveyor belt when you land than in-flight. Looking forward to more folks !! Keep Safe, Keep Smiling and Keep the pork pies and Weston's away from the Monday night Sim Crew 🤣🤣🤣
We made an Episode 2 of Debunking Flying Fears! Watch Episode 2 Here ua-cam.com/video/c00C9JnO6fw/v-deo.html
Why do helicopters crash more often?
hi there,
good morning. question; at the 3:22 mark it shows a shot of a Doppler radar screen. does that show the altitude of the clouds?
if they [the clouds] are low enough, are you able to fly over a storm?
Thoughts 💭 on what happened with Mh370 ?
Transavia est une entreprise incroyablement raciste. Ne vous exposez pas à la misère à laquelle j'ai été confrontée. J'essaie actuellement de les poursuivre en justice pour crime de haine.
I sat next to a nice young man from Atlanta to Chicago last month. I could tell he was deathly afraid of flying. After asking him a few common pleasant questions I found out that he was a musician. I asked if I could listen to his music and he broke out two pairs of earphones. I listened to a portion and asked him to turn it off so we could discuss the nuances. I kept him engaged the entire time. The entire flight I kept him so busy talking about his music that he didn't have time to be terrified. I saw him at the baggage claim area after the flight and he said "Now I know what you were doing". He thanked me, I gave him a knowing smile, we shook hands, said good luck to each other, and went our separate ways.
We need more people like you :)
You became a "single use friend" 😅
Nice move though
What a truly lovely, warm, caring, genuine story that isn’t at all made up as completely fabricated BS. Lovely stuff.
I second the comment from Jacob8648. You have much to teach the world. I hope I can learn from the example you set with that musician.
Now I've got "Separate Ways" playing in my head :D
Regional pilot based in the U.S.A. I watch these in order to gather information to pass along to my passengers when they have their concerns flying on smaller regional jets. To passengers, everything said here is absolutely correct. It is literally the safest thing you will do all day. I love my life, I value it very much. If I see ANYTHING that makes me think the flight won't be safe, I sure as hell ain't going anywhere.
My advice to nervous fliers, Remember that your pilots have their own lives to worry about too. We have families and loved ones just like you do. We just want to do our jobs safely and go home to our families just like you do. We wouldn't be doing this every day if we thought the worst was even possible. We are NOT daredevils. We are NOT going to take off if there's anything that makes us think it will be unsafe.
So please, relax, enjoy the flight.
What helped me was looking at a flight tracker understating exactly how many planes was in the air on a daily basis
Now I’m taking a private pilots license can’t believe I was fearful of flying back in the days
"Remember that your pilots have their own lives to worry about too"
Couldn't that be said about many jobs? Driving buses and trucks, for example, which is already much more dangerous than commercial aviation, yet many people choose to speed and even defend it and vote against measures that try to prevent it. What sets the airline industry apart?
@@samuelitooooo Very good question, I’ll try to explain the best I can.
Airline pilots are very different than commercial drivers. We require far more training, go through much more rigorous screening, and have a much more safety-orientated culture than other transportation professionals.
Pilots who have a caviler attitude toward safety don’t last very long in the airline industry. If they want “thrills” they’re welcome to go fly aerobatic planes or low level jobs (like crop dusting) But they can’t bring that sort of attitude to a passenger jet. Passenger airline pilots have to ask themselves “would I feel comfortable putting my children on that plane flown by that guy”. If the answer is no, they don’t make it very far. All of us ask that question about ourselves and our own colleagues.
Basically, we weed them out. There’s quite a few reasons we haven’t had a fatal crash since 2009 (in the USA) that’s just one of the big ones.
Thank you for that comment. I will save it and remember it when I leave the country again.
😊
This dude has a way of speaking and explaining things that legit puts me at ease
Thats what pilots do
“This is Captain Nigel and we will be flying at 35,000 feet with a flight time of 3 hours…” When I hear someone like this guy..I know that I’m going to be safe!
Yes, I like his voice too!!!!!
It’s called being British
-Nervous?
-Yes.
-First time?
-No, I've been nervous plenty of times.
I was nervous but I’m good now and this video got recommended out of nowhere so ig this a sign. I’m a first time flyer
There is no stopping in a white zone.
If you are not fit to fly under the "I'M SAFE" rule of aviation. The pilot should not be fit to fly the plane!
Surely you can't be serious
😅😅😅
Ive been an air traffic controller for 15 years. Ive never seen a commercial crew get remotely close to losing an airplane. I see thousands of safe flights every day. Airline pilots are extremely skilled and professional and those jets have many redundant systems. The crews take the safety of those planes very seriously. I would have zero worries flying on any airline.
Wow 😮
@@firstbloood1 Sooner or later one of those DEI pilots will surely auger in.
DEI is coming
It’s simply the fear of knowing that you could possibly be that one no matter how many times people say 99% of the planes Land you will always think you’re that one percent and that’s something no one can save you from
How is it being a air traffic controller?
I was terrified of flying and would sit rigidly in my seat just willing it to be over and that was just a 2 hour flight to Portugal. Then my daughter emigrated to New Zealand and I knew I would have to go one day, so I Watched a lot of videos like this one and felt reassured. I've now flown to NZ 9 times, and apart from still not liking the feeling of Turbulence I know I can do it even on my own. I worked out that I have achieved around 125,000 miles taking holidays abroad and NZ into consideration. There's nothing like going to visit my daughter and family to inspire me to get on that plane.
So happy for you. 😊
Well done! I hope you don’t have to fly into Wellington! Sometimes there’s enough turbulence in one landing to last a lifetime!
@@Eleni_I Thank you.
@@scottlewisparsons9551 Yes, flying into Wellington is one flight I would try to avoid.
I'm like you. I would get terrible sweating of the hands, and then stomach pains like IBS and just convinced every change in engine nose or turbulence was a sign. Now I try to sneak a few drinks before then chewing gum.
As an aircraft mechanic, I take pride in all my work. I make sure that I follow the maintenance manual to the T. Safe & happy travels everyone!
Great to hear! ✈️
Thank you!
@@jaysonglick6371 You’re welcome!
I appreciate it, thanks for taking your job as the serious matter it is, well done.
Thank you 😊
Unfortunately seeing some air crash programs some clearly don’t
I like when the pilot said, "The most dangerous part of flying is when you are driving to the airport!" Love it....
Especially in the Philippines 🤣
Thought I was alone in this😊
Correct. The air is not full of idiots.
It's not true
@@miguelsuarez8010 disagree
I hate flying. Turbulence is usually what scares me a lot. Thank you for this captain. This helps put my mind at ease.
@@Since-wen if it helps, I’ve heard somewhere that no plane has ever crashed due to bad turbulence. Think of it as you have a little small toy airplane and you put it in jelly/jello, the toy plane will shake around in the middle but it doesn’t fall out due to the shaking. That’s what turbulence is like.
Me also, I don't like flying. I think you do get more used to it the more you do it.
The best flights i have had even with Bumpy Turbulence have been where the Pilot has reassured us that its turbulence and nothing major to worry about, they keep us notified and informed. The worst and scariest flights i have had is when the pilot barely communicates and lets us to our own imagination as to wtf is going on....
pilots tell you its turbulence lol. I normally just have the pilot put on the seatbelt sign and say f(ck off you figure it out
Totally agree when there silent my mind runs wild when they speak bes all good
sometimes being an actual pilot makes it worse. I just keep thinking of what hes doing, when, and why. why didnt he put the gear down yet? why is he throttling down the engines? why are we making a steep turn on approach with the landing gear down? why are we at full throttle on landing with the nose attitude pitched very high? why are the flaps being retracted already? why haven't we lifted on takeoff yet? maybe he needs me to come in there and help him lol. i like to be in control and see out the front window of the cockpit, not just rely on natural feels in the cabin and wonder what lies ahead...
I had a flight around 7 years ago, and we were flying around a hurricane, but it was still very bumpy. It felt like we were actually free falling for 3-4 seconds at a time. Ppl on the plane were screaming and it made it 10 times worse. None of the staff or pilots said anything, and some of the attendants even looked nervous. After we landed was when they finally informed us why it was so turbulent. After that experience, I have been scared to fly. I know planes can withstand all of that and we were probably not in any real danger, but just the whole atmosphere of ppl screaming on the plane and panicking is terrifying.
@@shakez003 that sounds absolutely terrifying!
I’m not afraid of flying but how reassuring is this guy. I want this guy to just do all kinds of calming voice overs for all kinds of anxiety.
I want him to fly the planes I'm on
💯
@@bobbyamos2098 He'll be too busy making youtube videos instead of flying the plane.
Same. He's so good I looked up to see if he was actually a psychologist, dressed as a pilot and reading a script. ;-)
Don't afraid fly friend. I am here
I used to be afraid of flying when I was younger but what helped me was actually watching air crash investigation shows that told stories of crashes, what went wrong, and how things have improved since, and now I love watching UA-cam shows like Mentour Pilot who tell stories of crashes and analyze them in depth from a pilot’s perspective. From watching these shows I’ve learned that crashes are incredibly rare and usually are the result of a chain of multiple failures and errors. Pilots are very well trained, there’s procedures for most emergencies, modern airplanes have many redundant systems, and all the crashes that happened in the past have been thoroughly investigated and changes have been implemented to prevent those problems from happening again.
Aside from that, also getting comfortable with the reality that I’m going to die someday somehow, and if it’s my time to go then it’s my time to go, and I’m not going to let fear hinder me from living life to the fullest, which includes traveling.
Wow! Thank you alot my friend🙏🏽
Funny, but these investigations are the reason I fear more than before. Sure, nowadays there are many redundancy systems, but~95% of the crashes are human error, and there's no the be-all and end-all fix for that.
mate im literally watching this bc im having my 1st flight in 2 days and im deathly afraid. I’ll take after your example and not let fear restrict me from living life to the fullest. cheers 🥂
@DanielHernandez hope you enjoyed your flight
@@DanielHernandez-dt7ff howd it go big dawg
What helped me is when looking up in the sky and seeing a plane fly by you are never worried of it crashing down or not landing safely. You just think 'oh cool a plane, I wonder where it's going'. Still trying to overcome my fear when being on a plane but that did help.
Really? I worry about that. But I dont worry if I fly.
Every time I see a plane in the sky I think about it crashing in front of my eyes 😂 and I hate to fly too
@@maijapapaya5297 same I think about it crashing
when I see a plane on the sky I always thank God and myself that I am not on board :D Flying is tbh the worst thing ever for me.
I hate heights,first flight I went on hit turbulence,flight I was on in 2023 had lightning in the distance,nice seeing it.I love flying now
After watching this video, I booked my first flight in over 20 years. Both my flights were great, little turblence but like you said, nothing to worry about. Thank You for making this video!
Great to hear!
U hv been a frog in the well for so long. Don’t u regret it
How did it go
@@Priest92 it went smooth. Definitely going to travel a lot more
@@dinomagnifico7076you got this bud, explore the world!
I’m a nervous flyer and always have been. If ever there’s something I’m unsure of during a flight I’ll always look at the body language of the crew. If they look unconcerned that’s good enough for me.
Still doesn’t stop me from sweating and holding onto something the entire time though! 😂
I think the trick is to fly more. I only fly once a year so I never give myself a chance to get accustomed to being in a plane frequently enough.
Im a psychiatrist and actually have a patient that is a flight attendant, and after he developed a panic disorder (unrelated to flying), he started to have symptoms while flying too, as if he had a phobia. My point is that fear of flying is totally irrational and is much more related to anxiety disorders than to anything else. So even if a crew member looks scared, it just means that he/she probably has a little bit of anxious tendencies, thats all
@@pasteldecarne485 it’s not an irrational fear, as humans we aren’t designed to be up high, it’s natural to be scared of heights and confined spaces that we can’t get out of .
I used to be a nervous flyer as well. Happened upon the videos of 2 UA-camrs; 74 Gear & Mentour Pilot. Their love of flying is contagious. I found that my fear turned to curiosity the more I learned about aviation from them. The amount of thought that has gone into even the thread pattern of the plane tires is amazing. It also helped me to no longer watch videos from social media influencers, who are more emotional than factual about aviation. Now when it comes to these type of videos I look for the commentator to have at least 3 bars on his/her shoulders (4 bars signifies a captain).
I agree with you. I am a nervous flyer but the more often I fly the more relaxed I became.
The more you fly the more your odds on you being involved in an air disaster . The aircrew are trained to look cool & act as if there is nothing wrong ,if the aircraft & all souls on board are doomed . They will smile & tell you the engines supposed to be on fire it’s quite normal for half the wing to break off now & then .
I used to be absolutely terrified of flying. Then I was on a flight to LGA on a regional jet & we encountered a bad storm so we were bouncing around all over the place & had to abort landing twice, eventually landing in Providence, Rhode Island because we didn't have enough fuel to keep circling. I was so scared, I was crying I even threw up because of the turbulence (and my nerves, I'm sure). We refueled & back up we went, the storm had passed & it was fine. Ever since that flight, I realized that it was safe, I was fine, the pilots KNOW WHAT THEY'RE DOING & now flying doesn't bother me at all. I do also watch a lot of Pilot You Tube channels for this very reason as well. Thank you for this video & for keeping us all safe!
@NostradamusJr. true what you said , but it’s is the present feeling of anxiety and suffering that’s I’m not comfortable with while flying . How do you avoid that? Not possible !
@NostradamusJr. I’d say for most it’s the fear of dying (the unknown), not the suffering. I think most people know going from 500mph into a ball of fire will be instant death with no suffering.
@Nitrodamous people where drowning in the ocean, gasping for air. Its not said you face zero pain. It all happend. But your content is a good hint to stir my thoughts on the next flight
Do you enjoy flying now?
That’s an interesting way to look at it, glad it was positive for you 👍🏼
I want this pilot for every flight I ever take the rest of my life. You were so good at explaining things confidently and inspiring me to let go of my fears. What an air Chad. Great job!
Honestly I could listen to this guy talk for hours. His voice is calming
What if two planes crash into each other midair? Oh, perfectly fine, perfectly fine. Nothing to worry about at all.
@@katiemurdock2361 😂
As a flight attendant, turbulence is the one thing that makes passengers very nervous. You explained it so well. Thank you!!
Thank you! ✈️
What makes me most nervous on a flight is when the air hostess says the words 'No more, you've had enough'
It only takes me a few seconds before 'I need more beer' survival mode kicks in..
I heard another "ask the pilot" put it very aptly. They don't fly around turbulence because the plane can't handle it, they fly around it for your comfort. They plane will do just fine.
I go on a plane tomorrow.... The thought of turbeluance is scaring me so badly
@@TheTwistDrink How was the flight?
I'm on the verge of crying thinking of my flight tomorrow, but I really appreciate hearing how calm you are and this is helping a bit. I guess I will be watching these videos all day! Thank you!
I used to be morbidly petrified of flying. To the point I needed Valium to get on the dam plane. Didn’t want to drink too much and not be in control. Tried rescue remedy. Everything apart from hypnosis. That was all around 15yrs ago. Now I just put my headphones on. Listen to my favourite tunes. Read the kindle and basically zone out. Works for me. Oh apart from the one time we where coming in to Leeds/Bradford airport it was a bit windy so the pilot informed everyone that he would be using the short run way so he would be coming in hard and fast. I was blissfully unaware of this. But the Mrs nudged me removed an ear cup from the headphones and said “ where coming in hard and fast” 🙈🙈 my guts dropped a mile. But we landed with no problem. It’s now a standing joke when ever we travel abroad.
Literally me now! My flight is in a week and I’m panicking. Ugh. I have flown 2 times before but I still get scared.
How was your flight??
@@tesiemarie8942 my flight both ways were great! Coming back was easier since I was more grounded in what I was excited to see again, ie my cat. But there was a period when we were landing where we had to go through thousands of feet of clouds due to the weather which scared me but I just reminded myself that even though I couldn't see, there were air traffic controllers and many other people aiding the pilot!
I have a flight tomorrow morning and have been frozen all day today! I used to fly so much and have no issue at all, now lately I've been having panic attack just thinking of flying. I hope these videos help me tomorrow!
I love seeing an old, retired pilot
He (or she) has made it through thousands, possibly tens of thousands of flights and is still here to tell the tale.
Gives me comfort.
they're retired?
Once about ten years ago I sat next to a girl who was really afraid of flying. Her friend was on her other side.
We were in the first row, no 1st class so we could see the cabin crew getting ready for take-off. She started crying when they closed the doors, then calmed down, got a bit agitated again at take-off. The flight was about an hour, and she calmed down a bit while in the air, but again the landing was a bit tougher for her. By that time me and her female friend held both her hands, and since I was in the window seat I warned her seconds before touchdown on the runway that there would be a slight bump.
At one point she said to me "that makes sense, you made me feel better now" which was after I pointed out to her that "the entire crew on planes like this, they're normal people who do this for a living every day, and you know there's no way, anyone, ANYONE, who is mentally stable would do this work for any pay in the world if they knew they'd be in absolute grave danger of getting killed every day at work, don't you think?"
It worked out fine, and although these feelings at times can be so strong they're beyond any logical reasoning, I take some pride in having been able to calm her.
I was on a flight one night with a friend when I spotted another airliner passing by us quite a distance away but close to the same altitude. I told him it was going to get a bit bumpy in a few minutes. He laughed as if how would I know. A few minutes later the plane started to shake a bit and then stop. When he asked how I knew that I told him that there was airliner that passed us close to the same altitude as we were and we would soon be in it's wake. Yep, airliners can leave a wake just like a boat does on water.
She is not the unusual one. You are. We are ground dwellers. There's nothing natural about getting in a tin tube at 35,000 feet or less. Think about it.
@@mowthpeece1neither is hopping in a steel box and rolling across the ground at 100kph
I went through a time of being terrified to fly, but had to if I wanted to visit my parents. I educated myself on the aircraft, how it functions etc., because knowing that something I thought was scary, was completely normal, helped immensely!!
Where were your parents an where do you live
I fly Edinburgh to South Africa to visit my family
I used to be a very fearful flyer. My daughter works in the aviation industry and my son is a fan of everything that has to do with planes. They have taught me so many things about how the aviation industry works that my fear went away completely. Knowledge is power😊
@@emma58242 the fact that you're getting on the plane in the first place is brave itself
@@DeadlyBeast205 thank you😊 Well, apparently the fear didn’t go away completely😑 it comes back sometimes but I still hop on the plane because I know how safe it is, I know my mind is playing tricks on me and I want to go places 😁
@@emma58242 you’re welcome and try going on a plane with a friend or someone you can talk to. You can also listen to music to keep you calm. I even brought my Nintendo Switch on a flight and had the best time ever! Flying is really fun when you get used to it
Thank you to all the amazing pilots out there for getting us safe to our destinations and loved ones.
I've heard most of these before, but what really helped me as a very nervous flyer was the Pilots calm demeanour. His comfort in explaining the details of what would could go wrong and how they would counter it is so reassuring. Cheers!
You are DELIGHTFULLY reassuring. I don't have a fear of flying, but you are calming, knowledgeable, and a joy to listen to. Thank you!
What a reassuring man. I’m terrified of flying but this genuinely makes me feel safer
then imagine being a pilot like him, 2 flights a day. driving feels safe probably because there are less elements to worry about but it actually isn’t as safe as he said.
The pilot is an android.
He quite undersold how unnerving it is being struck by lightning, it is very noticable.
Just remember that when you're flying, whatever happens is out of your control. I find it comforting to know that there is nothing I could personally do to stop a plane crashing and by accepting that resignation I feel better during severe turbulence etc.
I'm not afraid of flying, just crashing.
Most of us are scared because we don’t have the knowledge. Thank you so much for giving this video. Really helps
Surely the knowledge is that 10 fully loaded airliners would have to drop out of the air every single day to match the equivalent 3600 people a day that die in vehicle accidents.
You might try watching a show called Mayday or Air Crash Investigation (depending on where you see it). It depicts crashes in great detail, which may seem scary at first, but they also explain in great detail exactly what caused it and what has been done since then to make sure something like that never happens again. My favorite thing about it is they don't sensationalize and they don't exaggerate. Everything is shown as accurately as possible from an educational standpoint.
And almost every time some disaster happened, you find that it was like 9 different things that all had to go wrong all at once for a crash to happen, just crazy odds. When you learn about just how hard it actually is to have a crash and everything we've learned from the ones that happened, that knowledge about what happened and why and most importantly why it wont happen again actually makes you feel a lot safer. Because every time a plane has crashed, every other flight after it has gotten safer.
I have been a passenger on maybe a couple of flights. All of those flights, before we got off the runway I got a panic attack. Hearing this was much needed. I am glad to hear about all the safety checks and ways you guys help us. Thank you for this video and getting people to where they need to be safely.😊
I could cry at how reassuring this is and how reassuring the comments are underneath. Thank you so much! You’ll never know how much this helps
I used to be dreadfully afraid of flying. I got over it. How? By flying a lot. Once I knew all the little noises and g-forces and bumps were the same on every flight, I knew to expect them and they didn't bother me as much. I am still not crazy about flying, but it has more to do with getting through the airports on each end.
I wanted to thank you for this video. I watched it the day before a flight and it was the most restful, stress-free flight I’ve ever had in my life. I usually need two anxiolytic pills to get through a flight… I feel a lot more serene and in safe hands after watching this. Turbulences and lightning were my biggest fears.
I've been flying for work (Regional and National Account Manager positions) for over 30 years and still have anxiety with turbulence, so I've started watching videos to help me. I've been on 2 flights with "Severe" turbulence, and on one plane that depressurized during flight and we had to make an emergency landing. Looking back on it, it was scary, but everyone was safe. Thankfully everyone was seated with seatbelts on. As others have said, this pilot is so reassuring!
30 years ! Wow that's a lot of years
Excellent work, Captain! I always direct people to a chap named Arnold Barnett, an expert in aviation safety/risk and a Professor of Statistics at MIT who says the following, "“If you were to take one random flight a day, you would, on average, need to fly every day for 55,000 years before being involved in a fatal crash”. Also, I know it's not everyone's area of interest but I'd reckon that just quickly reading up on some of the basic physics that underpin flying could do wonders to calm a nervous flyer, taking away some of the mystique and seeing it rooted in solid science.
Sir did did such a marvelous way of explaining many of the fears some people share. I am one of them. May God continue to take you and your passengers to and from their journey safely. God Bless You throughout your career.
Here is what I do when I fly- If there is turbulence or anything that makes me nervous, I watch the flight attendants.
I figure that, if it is serious, they’ll know and I’ll be able to tell by how they act.
This has totally kept me from freaking out many times 😂
I first thought of this when I was on a crowded flight, sitting next to the steward area. When we hit a bunch of turbulence, a flight attendant was sitting on a fold down chair that faced the side of my seat.
So the plane is bouncing around, and I’m all white knuckled freaking out, and I turned to my left, and that flight attendant was totally laughing at me 😂. I started thinking about it then and relaxed.
im watching them like hawks and also micromanaging piloting the plane.Every noise,bump,electrical smell,,,,,,,i notice lol
I used to do that too but then I though “what if they are trained to act calm for the sake of the passengers to not freak them out?” And then my anxiety returned :(
@@SpaceMango yup I do that too...seriously ...;)
@@kamaladixon4505🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Flight crew are definitely aware that people watch them first lol, it is indeed part of training and they know that everyone is watching them for cues. That said, if you’re used to flying as much as then, nothing rattles you. They’re not pretending to not be bothered because they’re not! It’s like riding the bus for them.
I used to have an awful fear of take off. I overcame this by filming the take off on my iPhone as I was concentrating on the filming rather than the actual take off. Thanks for the explanations Mark, wonderful job….
Cheers for the tip. Will try that
Taking off is the best part 😁
I’m also not only scared to death at takeoff, but also I get disoriented from the climbing and the cracking noise. Fear of flying really affected me negatively. Avoiding traveling as much as I can. I wished I could have gone to many places but I haven’t because of this.
This is brilliant. I will try this.
yep@@SuperballBG
The longest flight I've ever been on was 13 hours from Switzerland to Atlanta and I have flown many times before then with relatively decent skies. The plane would shake but it felt like being on a bumpy road. I had no issues with flying besides that weird feeling when taking off until I was on a less than an hour flight from New Orleans to Dallas and we hit open air turbulence. It felt like the plane was going down for a few seconds and it was so upsetting that everyone on the plane screamed. I never experienced that before but since then I have been terrified of flying. This has been helpful, I'm learning more about airplanes.
I am actively trying to overcome my fear of flying, and videos like this are really helpful for me.
Me too, I've been stuck overseas for 15 years because I'm afraid to fly home
Another thing that might help is, if you’re interested, to learn the physics behind how planes fly. It’s quite fascinating!
I used to be scared to death of flying, my wife was a general aviation pilot who helped me get over my fear, not necessarily only explaining to me how safe flying is but rather exposing me to more practical and logic driven activities which helped rewire my brain, it was a long process but one of the many positive side effects to this was overcoming a debilitating fear of flying, we just finished a three-leg journey to and from Japan and back to the States and it was a piece of cake. I believe that videos such as this one should be made available in airports and/or even as part of the in- flight viewing experience for the white-knuckle flyer, I believe these videos would help immensely. Thanks!
ask your wife about windshear before landing LMAO
She never had to deal with wind-sheer but she had to crab a couple of times in very windy areas while landing, definitely not wind-sheer though luckily. Have you had to deal with wind-sheer? If so what was it like?
@@patricktuorto as a passenger, i experienced wind shear, a week ago, before landing, the pilot had to do a go around so the plane doesnt crash, with a airbus A 320, at Rome airport. It scared me more, the moment when the pilot before landing went pedal to the metal and go up again LOL
@@danieldaniel1210 😱 Yikes, I probably would've had more than one glass of wine and a few glasses of grappa after that.
@@danieldaniel1210 "Go arounds" occur about 1 out of 500 landings. Congratulations, you are done for a while!
I’m going to listen to this guy every time before a flight. Going this Friday to NYC!
currently on vacation in cancun and had to experience 3 aborted landings, due to a rainstorm, before finally landing safely on the 4th. never been more terrified of flying in my life afterwards. this video definitely helped relieve a bit of my anxiety for the flight back.
Appreciate the time to make this video. A lot of people just don't realize how much these jets can do, even if it means going back to basic flying. Thank you for the time !
Thanks capt. You have now allayed my fears in flying. In fact, I hate turbulence.
God bless you capt.
Thank you so much for this video. I'm 52 and have never been on a plane because I'm terrified. This makes me feel a lot better again,...thank you
I hope you find the courage to take your first flight. Planes truly are a marvel of engineering.
I am Almost 50 and haven't flown since I was 5. I've been getting the itch lately to give it a try - just a short flight - and big brother mustve heard me talking about it and this video was recommended. I'm so glad I watched this video - I hope he ends up being my pilot on my first flight 🤣🤣
You can do it! I rode my first roller coaster last month and I cried after because I didn't know I had the courage until after I did it.
Don't let your fear hold you back. There are so many amazing places to see in this world. I used to be scared of flying but I took a job that required I fly 100+ days per year I have now been on thousands of flights all over the world and sleep like a baby. I used to not even be able to enjoy vacations because the fear of the flight. You will be very happy once you overcome this fear. It will take some time but just keep pushing through and you will get over it.
Please, give it a go
Our body change. I used to fly a lot, all around the world number of times. Living in Australia,the trip to Europe are extremely long. I hated it. Now I'm 57,and 2 hours trip is too frightening for me.I changed . Last 3 years I stopped traveling even interstate because I'm uncomfortable to go. I don't know what's happened to me but my brain changed.
I'm not scared of flying I'm scared of crashing 🤣
I think thats alot of people including me
Looool same
😂😂😂😂😂
Same
Did you even watch the video
There is no word for the amount of fear and anxiety I had when I first started to fly internationally I never liked flying domestically either. My nephew is a pilot and basically told me the more I fly the less anxious I’ll get. I pondered that and looked at my life and the more I did anything that was fearful or knew The less anxious I got. I’ve been to Thailand and back many times now and yes I’m a little anxious and hopefully I won’t jinx myself but so far every time I fly I feel better and better. Mann and I spent decades and insisted on many many hours rather than fly. Noise canceling headphones are very good because of my phobia I simply put them on place some type of nature sounds so it doesn’t feel like I’m in a small tube close my eyes and that really helps too. Thank you for taking the time to make these videos. I wish everyone much peace happiness and flying.
Thanks! Listening to you calms me down! As much as I like traveling, I am scared of flying. For every turbulence, the devil is quickly in my ear telling me that we are crashing and my heart just drops to my stomach 😢
I appreciate your calm tone of voice and thorough scientific explanations. Great bedside manner!
Thanks Mark! I am a nervous flyer and you addressed all of my main fears and put my mind at rest
Thank you so much for sharing this information. Although I have been flying since I was a child, now a 53 year old adult my fear of flying has increased dramatically over the years. The slightest bit of turbulence and that’s me blowing in the sick bag and gripping my seat for dear life. Watching you explain everything and in great depth I can honestly say you have given me reassurance. Next time I’m flying I will remember this. Thank you, flying is not a nice fear so I feel reassured.
Lisa, this is me as well. I flew when I was younger and absolutely loved it!! For some reason, now in my 40s, I developed some flight anxiety. I don't know why or where it came from, but I totally get where you're coming from. I hate it. I don't get sick from it, but I do get that uncomfortable, on the edge of me seat, anxiety.
@@SlammedZeroI don't think children worry about that type of accident, unless an adult talks them into it. As adults, we think much more about our demise, so it's more normal to be anxious on a plane. I take the easy way out and pop a prescription pill, works pretty good.
This has helped a lot. I am TERRIFIED of flying, but my childhood best friend is getting married in Vegas which is 26 hours away from home. Her parents, very very grateful to them, paid for my plane ticket to go. I will be on the same flight as them, but I am still very scared. I hate heights (really just falling from those heights) and feeling like I am trapped. Those are my number 1 fears. This will also be my first flight so it's a lot of unknowns and facing biggest fears. I was told by a pilot that I have control issues lol. He asked me if I get car sick in the back seat and then asked if I stare out the windshield when I am in the back to feel better and I said yes and he said "Seems like you need to be in control to feel better" lol. He was cool. But thank you again for this video, it really helps.
I get car sick and look out the windshield when I'm in the back too!!! I have control issues too!!!
How was the flight?
@@DoeRecompense she didnt answer what if she crasheed😭😭😭
Thank you. I'm 45 and have flown a number on one hand. This has really really helped me. Going to Cancun at the end of September and will watch this monthly religiously. ❤
I’m in my late 50s and have just begun a change of career as an FA…. so I am getting used to turbulence.
Probably the only thing I really worry about now is managing the cabin service in turbulence.🙃
This video is reassuring… thank you!
Thank you 🙏
In my younger years I used to look forward to the flights and saw them as part of the whole holiday experience. However, this all changed in the early 2000s when I was on an Air France aircraft coming into land at CDG in Paris in heavy fog. The plane was flaring just prior to touch down when suddenly it went nose up and proceeded a full power steep climb. The pilot came over the PA to apologise but stated that there 'there was another aircraft on the runway'!
We then circled for a few minutes before making a second attempted landing. As stated, there was heavy fog and looking out of the window, I could not see the ground. We hit the runway and then bounced up again before finally touching down very heavily. Again the pilot apologised and stated that the landing was 'offered by the auto-pilot'!
I spent a few days at Disnetland Paris with my family before an uneventful return flight. I then avoided flying for a number of years as I was unnerved about the whole experience. I eventually got back to taking flights but was always very wary and did not enjoy the experience any more.
However, after getting into the many Aviation Streams such as Airliners Live, Big Jet TV, Airline Videos Live etc. I realised just how many flights were taking off and landing just at single airports every day without incident. I also started to recognise all of the aircraft variants and getting more into it. I now look forwards to flying again and have just returned from New York for which we actually planned the travel just so we could fly Vigin Atlantic on an Airbus A350-1000.
Hopefully this tale will help others as I should really have realised that the incident at CDG demonstrated that there are systems in place to avoid serious incidents such as runway incursions and as for the heavy landing? Well I couldn't see the ground due to the fog, so what else could the pilots do but use the systems available to them.
As Mark says on this video, travelling to the airport is significantly more risky than the actual flights to and from your destination. 😉
Lies. They wouldn’t have had approval to land
@@FasterthanSpeed414 mistakes happen
Thank you very much for this informative video. I have a terrifying phobia for flying and having so much anxiety flying out in two weeks, this definitely helped ease my worries and I was able to book my flight.
Mark is fantastic! Can we please see more of mark on the channel?
THIS.
This is immensely helpful, thank you! I struggle not to panic just watching UA-cam videos of flying, and videos like these are such great exposure for people like me. The last flight I went on, the air hostess told me to take a bus next time lol 😂 Literally just gonna imagine this guy is flying every flight I ever go on once I'm ready to fly again!
Having worked as crew and flown and have a little bit of knowledge about flying everything he said is spot on. Flying is safer than anything. Your cabin crew are highly trained in a plethora of different things. Serving your meal or drinks is the easy bit. Your pilots are trained more than you could imagine. Even as crew my first two flights I remember we was allowed to stay with the pilots in the cockpit for two flights and it was an amazing experience and insight into what they do on a day to day. For all cabin crew and pilots I always have upmost respect for having been one myself before. God bless you all
Yes a brilliant feature. All those with fear of flying need to watch. Great job by Captain
My Dad was an airline pilot, so I really have no great fear of flying.... I do sit on a plane and think "let's hope we get to the other end", but then I just accept it for what it is.
I think that my Dad being such an amazing man, is the reason for not being worried.
same, he started in the US Navy, ive been around aircraft since i was in diapers. In them, around them, built models or them, flew them in simulators, im more scared driving through the city to get the Airport than the flight
@@DaytonaRoadster 🍻 to great Dads!
My fear is from falling. Not flying.
@@pommiebears why? Falling won't kill you...
I bet the bird would disagree that a bird strike is not a problem.
I flew from London to Cape Town earlier this year and it was the most turbulent flight I've ever been on. In the 11 hours it took, there wasn't a period of 10 mins where there wasn't turbulence, so much so that the pilot didn't even bother to keep the seat belts sign on. I am not a nervous flyer generally but after one particular moment of bad turbulence ,I felt very let down by the staff who I overheard telling passengers "how scary that was." I believe that if the airline crew remain calm then the passengers remain calm and anxiety of flying can be reduced.
as someone who is afraid of any slight turbulence, i appreciate the explanations on all the engineering behind building an aircraft
I love the professional/calm way he speaks and explains.
One time on a flight (I always try and get a window seat) the lady beside me noticed I was crying. She asked if I was okay and that flying was safe, there was nothing to get worried or be scared of. I replied that I'm not crying out of fear, but out of sheer awe. Every time I fly I cry - but they are tears of joy than of fear. I almost can't process how incredible it is that humans created flight for themselves. That this massive hunk of steel can get us across countries, oceans. The incredible sights from my seat - mountains, prairies, canyons, cities. I'll even schedule layovers so I can get more take offs than a direct flight. 😊
Oh how I wish this information would had been available to my late father. He was too terrified to fly most of his life and we ended up stuck in a car on an 8000 km round trip across Canada to visit family every summer. By the time he was 60 he finally gave it a try. Not that he ever liked it, but he did go on a few flights, so there's that.
If my brain worked in more linear fashion I'd have taken flying lessons...it's utter joy to me.
I love this! I cry too. Knowing we live in a time where we can get anywhere in just about a day or two. Makes me feel incredibly lucky.
I do too!! I am fearful of flying but as soon as I get in the air, I’m amazed at how incredible it is to be able to experience!!
I cry when I see London. I’m English, I live in Australia with my Australian family, so every few years, I fly home to see my parents. When I see the M25 that circulates London, I always cry. Same when I see Sydney, I see the harbour bridge, knowing my husband is waiting for me, and after a few weeks away, I’ve missed him, so….i get it.
I don’t mind flying but I hate turbulence and always thought of those scenarios. Very informative and helpful. Thank you.
I watched this video probably a year ago. Since then, I took a trip to Europe, and I want you to know that because of THIS video, I was very relaxed the entire time I was flying on the several flights I took. Not that I was terrified beforehand or anything, but this really eased my mind. Thank you for this.
This is fantastic guys. It’s reassuring to hear from an expert about the various scenarios that tend to worry us passengers at times.
None of those worry me. Mechanical error, pilot error worries me
@@billbally4419 SAME
@@billbally4419for all of us who watched documentaries, know that those are one of the main reasons for the crash
I have a deep love and admiration for the accomplishments of science. But I still get scared when a plane hits turbulence. All the scientific knowledge in the world about lift, and wing-load, and 'it's the safest way to travel' abandon me when we hit rough patches. Thank you for this video. I think it will make me less afraid the next time I fly. Airline pilots and their matchless skill have my deepest respect and esteem.
I can read and listen to this all day, still keeps me locked up and the fear grows. It’s trying to get myself to let go and just go with it because we are missing out on too many trips because it controls me
It's weird, I've never been a nervous flyer but lately I'm getting anxiety for some reason. Specially in flights that go over the Atlantic ocean, I know about the ETOPS and that there's always once place to land in if the engines fail but it's out of my control!
Hopefully I'll overcome it as I fly more, cause I know that realistically there's no risk at all.
You're feeling anxious because its been a while since a trans-atlantic flight crashed, and you know its gonna happen again eventually.
I’m not a nervous flyer, but this was very informative and he was very calming
Good to hear! Hope it helped
This is the first and only video that I have watched that seems to have genuinely improved my fear of flying. Thank you.
Glad it helped!
Thank you Captain! We need this playing on inflight TV! I have had a fear of flying all my life and I am flying to Tokyo in November 2023, this helps my mind a little, I will be back afew times to rewatch 😊
Me too. But the more you fly you get used to it all.
overcame my life-long fear of flying since 2015... have travelled the world since! thanks for this incredible video :)
For someone with flight anxiety...this helps...a lot! Thanks.
I’m a nervous flier because I do not have a lot of knowledge about the physics and the mechanics of the airplanes. These videos make me feel better. Whenever I fly over the ocean I always worry about a water landing, mostly because of the sharks that will show up
Thank you - very informative. My main anxiety is around traffic congestion and avoiding collisions
I used to have a fear of flying, then I came to research and understand the mechanics of commercial flight... As well as all the systems in place. I could now go to sleep after boarding and feel comfortable I would land safely... And I am a person that understands physics and mechanics... I no longer fear flying by one bit. In fact, I like to sit a bit behind the wing to watch the flaps/slats and spoilers work... It now fascinates me.
Trains, planes, very chill, doesn't make me nervous at all. Can sleeping the whole time.
Coaches? Taxis? Cars? Way worse, way more things that can go wrong.
Looking forward to this I am a very nervous flyer I hate it to be honest but to get to nice places I have to put myself through it so hopefully this video may help me 🙏🏻🤞🏻
Me too
Good job, Sir. As we say the most dangerous thing about flying is the drive to and from the airport.
People like you are the ones who helped me overcome my fear of flying, thank you!
I find it awesome and terrifying at the same time.
I’d never flown on my own (been flying the past 30 years) till last month, when I flew to Dubai and back. I’ve watched so many videos like this that I felt comfortable and relaxed, it’s the most enjoyable flight/s I’ve had to date.
This videos are invaluable to a lot of people (me included), so thank you 🙏
lol i haven t yet even been alive for 30 years , but yeah i flew this year for the first time at 27 lol and it s exactly as you say awesome and terrifying (the takeoff is just epic)
I will add in one thing that I think a lot of people get scared of. Immediately after takeoff you will likely hear the engines drawing down in power. You may also feel like the aircraft is sinking. The first part occurs because the pilots have purposely reduced power from take off thrust to climb thrust. The second part is purely a sensation felt, but the aircraft is not decending!
Yes, you're right and it's even worse at my regional airport SNA (John Wayne). Short runway with rich neighborhoods at the end that don't want noise. Procedure is: Pilot lines up the craft, stands on the brakes and spools up the engines. Extreme thrust, quick V2 and steep angle for about 1000 ft. THEN he powers way down and levels off (feels like floating) over the mansions until clears the coast line then powers back up in a big way and climbs.
Most pilots will announce all this to avoid the souls on board from "puckering".
This is definitely me and why my main fear of flying is fear of take off. But even knowing what is happening doesn’t help. I still experience intense anxiety to the point that I feel extremely anxious if I even think of booking a ticket. I avoid flying as much I can. It ruins so many things.
@@MissAmarintia I'm like you and getting worse as I age for some reason. I flew a ton in my 30's, 40's and 50's all over the world on some really dubious airlines (Aeroflot, Avianca, etc) but now, in my 60's I have to have at least a couple glasses of wine.
@MissAmarintia I would strongly encourage speaking with your doctor about this. Often when this type of phobia is encounter, your doctor may prescribe an antianxiety medication to take before flight. They can greatly help. And don't feel bad, a fear of flying is very common!
@@kendallevans4079 I take some Valerian Root herbal supplement about 45 minutes before boarding and it has really kicked in by the time that we take off. It is not a cure but it does help to calm the nerves. Now having started watching these vides and reading comments, I am thinking that my next flight will be much better simply because of the understanding about the noises and bumps etc. and when they are going to happen.
I’m afraid of flying. Flew for the first time in my adult life last year. Horrible experience personally but I made it and that was thanks to this video. I’m still afraid but I’m pushing through and going on another flight this year. Needed to watch this video again. It’s little coming from a random person on the internet I know but I just wanted to express my thanks to you for this video. It genuinely helps in my time of absolute irrational fear. Thank you.
Glad you added the part about the diversionary airport. I was on a long flight and we were running low on fuel. The captain tried landing in extremely rough weather, whole plane was bucking like a rodeo bull and he was unable to do so. He calmly climbed out and we landed at an airport 70 miles away.
That turbulence is what keeps me from ever flying. I really want to travel but not enough to endure a possibly turbulent flight.
@@isaidwhatisaid76 you know I’ve flown a lot of times and that was literally the worst I’ve ever been in. Seriously, people were praying out loud and I was making peace with the almighty but that was just one time for 20 minutes. To me anyway, 99% of the time it’s just, well, boring. Travel is something I just enjoy so much that I’m willing to put up with some bumps, I hope you can overcome your fear and give it a try.
@@isaidwhatisaid76 it can be nerve wracking for me also and especially my mom, but i try to think about how turbulence has never brought a plane down before and the odds of the one i'm on being the very first in the 100+ years of aviation are next to none. i also think of it like a thrill ride, because with all the safety features and regulations for civilian airplanes, you're as safe if not much safer on a turbulent plane than on a rollercoaster. there's also boats tho, not as quick but can be a fun adventure in itself! i hope you get to travel and do the things you want
I gotta be honest, I have a tremendous fear of flying. But this video breakdown absolutely helped. I guess it’s something about just feeling the turbulence, and not being abled to see or feel like I have any control. But I have definitely considered the facts this pilot mentioned. Hopefully I’ll be abled to love life traveling more and not restricted to just “vehicle only destinations” 😃😵💫
I got an app called turbi- this helps me massively because it gives you an idea of what to expect, so it doesn’t come as such a shock and doesn’t catch you off guard :)
As an aircraft mechanic for years. I love flying. A lot gos into flying and the people who control it care. Pilots and mechanics are very bonded. Especially if they start in the the military
As an American, It feels a lot more legit when a Brit says it. 😂
@@BobbyBigallo agreed 👍 🤝
Great video for those who have a genuine fear of flight. Well done
Hi thank you for sharing your information. I had a phobia of flying many years ago. I took a two and a half day coach journey to the Algarve instead of a two and a half hour flight just so i did,nt need to fly. The way i was able to overcome my fear was to watch youtube videos of inside the cabin whilst taking off and landing over and over again. I do feel anxious these days but it does not stop me flying anymore, to this day i have flown over 140,000 air miles. Once again thanks for sharing, your video will help many others like me.
I've never been afraid of flying, I love it. It's the crashing that scares me to death.
I am from the island with the 8th most difficult landing in the world (Madeira, Portugal)
Ive always been fidgety about flying but i was ok with it. There was this one flights, that we spent 1h trying to land, but the wind was awful.
I was full on panicking. I couldn’t breathe, i was crying, almost throwing up, and hallucinating.
Ever since then ive had a severe phobia of flying.
Going back home for the summer and im hoping this video will help lol
I am a nervous flyer. You and your soothing voice put me at ease for my next flight in 4 weeks.
Airplane: “Boom, crunch!!”
Mark: “Perfectly normal mate, nothing to worry”
I never knew an aircraft can land itself!! That’s cool and reassuring.
all unpiloted planes eventually land themselves...
It was Concorde's accident that really boosted my fear. While I know that it was a very unique freak accident, it got stuck in my mind and a crash caused by something similar has always been a primary source of fear in my case 😅 But this video helps a lot nonetheless, thank you!
Thanks guy's. I love this new additional content so 10/10 to the team.
This is so easy to follow and fascinating to watch...... Thank you so much.
Proud to support AL and all you do and for the educational posts like this.
Also, thank you for confirming that..... "You are more at risk driving to the airport", and probably more at risk of an injury pulling your luggage off the conveyor belt when you land than in-flight.
Looking forward to more folks !!
Keep Safe, Keep Smiling and Keep the pork pies and Weston's away from the Monday night Sim Crew 🤣🤣🤣